Friday, August 29, 2014
Kahawa
Since I just posted a review of Donald E Westlake's Dancing Aztecs, it's worth also taking note of Kahawa. He considered the pair of them to be his best work, and I'd have to agree. On the surface, this is a familiar Westlake caper: some guys steal a 33-car-long train of coffee in Uganda, and spirit the coffee out of the country during the era of Idi Amin. But it's not his usual light-hearted caper, since it graphically takes place amidst the backdrop of Amin's reign of terror. It is tightly plotted, with setbacks, double-crosses, mixed motivations from the principals, piracy and hijacking, romance, sex, and quite a bit of violence. But, it's tightly plotted, and tells the fictional tale of what was, apparently, an actual robbery.
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